Many cultural factors intensify
the midlife transition and help cause it to become a crisis.1. We live in a
youth-oriented society. When we were young adults, we enjoyed being
"in". However, when we reach midlife, we feel "out." Young adults are
used as the models of our society. If you're not one of them--you're "out of
it!"
2. We live in a throw-away society. When I was at a mens retreat
with men who worked for electronic companies, they said their competitive industry has a
systematic evaluation program to wash men out. When they started with the company as young
men, they were given lots of affirmation and positive strokes, but when they turned 40,
the company started evaluating them more often.
These men said, "You can always tell the midlife guys who have just been
evaluated. They dont show up for work the next couple of days. Sometimes
theyre gone a whole week. They are so devastated." After a while the older men
quit. Their leaving makes room for the new, young turkeys coming up the line. Those
twenty-two-year-olds dont realize they are being put on a human conveyor belt that
is going to chew them up and spit them out the other end before theyre 45.
3. We have two other generations to care for. At midlife we have to care
for our children, and we may be parenting our parents. Our parents have provided backup,
support, counsel, and sometimes even financial assistance--but now its the other way
around. Now we have parents needing guidance and direction, emotional support, and perhaps
financial assistance--plus kids heading off to college.

The midlife man sees a guy in the paper aged 42 has died, he
calls out to his wife, "Hey, Honey, did you see this in the paper? This guy was only
42, and he died of a heart attack!"
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4. Marriage satisfaction is low at midlife. A man in his thirties is
focused on the single goal of his career. He is willing to sacrifice almost everything
else. He has not even though about his marriage. However, the midlife marriage is marked
with the husbands midlife crisis, when he is feeling a combination of guilt because
he has neglected his marriage, and hopelessness because he feels the marriage is dull and
dead--plus the wife has had her own midlife crisis and now wants to go back to school to
become a lawyer. Why should he even try to revive this stressed-out marriage?
5. A new awareness of the potential of death. A twenty-five-year-old
looks back and sees that 25 years have passed since he was born. But a forty-five-year-old
realizes that he may have only 25 years left.
The young man does not look at the obituary page on his way to read the sports page.
The midlife man, however, takes a glance and when he sees a guy aged 42 has died, he calls
out to his wife, "Hey, Honey, did you see this in the paper? This guy was only 42,
and he died of a heart attack!" He begins to feel his chest and he wonders about that
pain he has been having. Sometimes a wife will jokingly respond, "Nah, it's just
gas." The midlife man suddenly feels that death isnt far off, especially if he
has lost one or more of his parents or close friends. He feels that he is the next one in
line.

Too many things are keeping him from accomplishing what he wants
to do. He feels worse than ever before in his life. At this point, he is entering his
midlife crisis.
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6. The knowledge explosion is intense. Two forces are at work in opposite
directions. One is the explosion of knowledge, and the other is the expanding
responsibility at work--both demand more time and energy. Both of these factors work in
opposition to his aging body that doesnt have the bounce and spring it had at 25.
7. The body is aging. One morning as he shaves, he looks at his face and
sees a really old man, with wrinkles around his mouth and eyes, graying hair on the
temples, a receding hairline, and the growing bald spot on top. Then, horror of horrors,
he looks at his waist. So, thats where his chest went!
He mumbles to himself, "Im not keeping up at work, Im repeatedly told
that youth is the only good age. My marriage is in trouble. My kids think they dont
need me. My parents are needing my attention. Im getting nearer to death. What does
it all mean, anyway?". He begins to feel he has too many problems.
There is a circuit overload. Too many things are keeping him from accomplishing what he
wants to do. He has spent all these years, all of the vigor of his youth, and what has it
done for him? He feels worse than ever before in his life. At this point, he is entering
his midlife crisis.
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